HF4422 (Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026))
All property insurance coverage required to allow appraisal of damages and alternative resolution.
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
To require property insurance policies in Minnesota to use a formal appraisal process to determine damages and loss values, creating an alternative dispute resolution path before possible court action, and to repeal a prior appraisal-related statute.
Main Provisions
- Applies to fire and allied lines of insurance as defined in Minnesota law.
- Requires the insured and the insurer to choose two independent appraisers within 20 days of a written demand if they disagree on actual cash value or the amount of loss (with an exception noted for total losses on buildings).
- If either party does not appoint an appraiser on time, a district court judge can appoint an appraiser for the party that failed to appoint.
- Appraisers must first select an umpire; if they cannot agree on an umpire within 15 days, a district court judge can appoint one.
- The appraisers must independently appraise the loss and state separately the actual value and the loss for each item.
- If appraisers disagree on the value and loss for an item, they only submit the differences to the umpire.
- An itemized written award from any two appraisers, filed with the insurer, determines the amount of actual value and loss.
- Each appraiser is paid by the party that selected them; the costs of the appraisal and umpire are shared equally by both parties.
- A lawsuit to recover a claim may not proceed in court or equity unless all policy requirements are met and the suit is filed within two years after the loss begins.
Process and Procedures
- Written demand required to trigger appraisal; timelines are set for appointing appraisers (20 days) and for appointing an umpire (after appraisers select one, if no agreement within 15 days).
- If disagreements occur, the umpire resolves differences to produce a final determination.
- The appraisal process is designed to resolve loss amounts without immediate litigation, through an agreed-upon sequence of appraisers and umpire.
Changes to Existing Law
- Establishes a new loss adjustment process under Minnesota Statutes chapter 65A, Section 65A.261.
- Repeals Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 65A.26, removing the prior framework and replacing it with the appraisal-based approach in 65A.261.
Scope and Implementation
- Applies to fire and allied lines of insurance as defined by statute.
- Targets disputes over actual cash value and loss amounts per item, not settlements of other policy terms.
Potential Impacts
- Shifts dispute resolution from court battles to an in-depth appraisal process.
- Could affect timelines, costs, and outcomes for property loss claims.
- Provides a structured mechanism to determine loss amounts and may reduce litigation, though costs are shared.
Relevant Terms - appraisal - appraisers - umpire - actual cash value - loss - itemized award - loss adjustment - district court - presiding judge - timelines (20 days, 5 days, 15 days) - fire and allied lines of insurance - Minnesota Statutes chapter 65A - 65A.261 - 65A.26 (repealed) - written demand - insurer - insured - loss amount per item - court action within two years
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 18, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Commerce Finance and Policy |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Repeals Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 65A.26.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "65A.26",
"subdivision": ""
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "References Minnesota Statutes 70A.03, clause 2, in defining the insured property insurance policy's scope for appraisal and related procedures.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "70A.03",
"subdivision": "clause 2"
}
]Progress through the legislative process
In Committee